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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Dec 1931, p. 6

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?A '• " i"r '-•* v*v * ,* Ir.< i v. |S?S!|S V ' if' % M ! a - f n * ^ « ^ ' " 1 •' t > i » "• » < W** e A. . -*»,. «. • *- .-* • ..V- . - \ ' - . /.f' THE M'HKNEY FLAIHDIAIJtE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5,1931 T".' :r • • Dhw to play Bridge AUCTION «J CONTRACTl Celine Si*#. AuihfiTr W * PRACTICAL AUCTION BR1DC# 5 UUi ARTICLE N&* y^A-fy. T-" > The normal hand at Auction and Contract is one that contains a suit of * HOt more thatt^five .cards in length. " Such hands occur about four-fifths ofthe time and are called normal harids because they are the usual hands, the Ones that occur four times as often as the other types. Hands that contain ' suits of more than five cards in length aire the unusual hands, the ones that occur only one-fifth of the time. Hands that contain a suit of six cards are not particularly unusual but those that contain a. suit;of seven or more cards v are the real freaks. Such hands occur /.'j . Jiftry seldom but their proper bidding, j*',"--.' " 'is both interesting and difficult.. 1 he • I . following problem hands are, "freaKs-'. - '• »v . -,-but interesting, because all contain "• * *' tnost unusual features. * . v 1 , ^ - Hand Vo. I ,1 \ ' * •: , " jfetfrls - K, 0. J, 7,6 * V*'- ' "Clubs -- none ; 1 t . Y ' : ,. Diamonds -- " :v --."v ' ,s,6^2 ; . , ; •.* 1 •"^wd^s --none ' xtA'-'v B i'4: ^ \ No score, first game.\3 dcalt andbid V oneclub. What Should fiagw bid with the foregping hand? ^ V . AUCTION "BIDDING: '• A should bid one diamond, it Overhe should continue bidding diamonds and not show the heart suit at •' There is no advantage in a shut-out ' < bid of five diamonds. Z has already shown his club suit and, if Y has a spade bid, he is more apt to bid five rides over a five-diamond bid than \ bids one diamond and then bids ' I w the hand gradually. It is not ad- • t •yisabl^ to show the heart suit because *• A*s partner is more apt to assist hearts • . than and A's heart suit for that reason .does not justify a < shut-out bid of either hearts or dubs. CONTRACT BIDDING: --, Z should bid t^o clubs iand on the v next bid show the heart suit.. The "two-bid" at Contract is a forcing bid, so Z is. sure of another chance to bid.~ The hand is a sure small slam if partner / can.assist either clubs or hearts, and this seems the best Way to find out. If partner fails to assist either suit, Z , £• should bid five clubs, v. -I" HandfNoi3 - X- • Hearts -- qon»; ••; f -j' y, Clubs--nohe /'••'•."'v". Diamon dS' -- A, K, Q, J,. : 8, 4,,3, 2 : v ; Spades -- A; K, y;19, 7' ; ,• Y "• A B • Z : ',]$>>#PQfe ami A B a gaineln. Z dealt an4 "passed, A bid oite plub apd^ Y bid one h(Eart,:^at-sh^d^8.s^"«^;tfi^^ f o r e g o i n g h a n d ? ; " ' v B . AUCTION BIDDING: : B should bid two diamonds, lift this. •' hand, also, R has nothing to gafn bjj a sliut-out bid. Both of the other suits have been sh&wn and the purpose of a ' shut-out bid is to shutout information; so, if the information has already been, giv*en, what would B accomplish by a shut-out bid? Such bid would only inform the opponents that B had a game hand in diamonds and incite them to overbid to save game. Bid such a hand by easy stages and the results will be much more satisfactory, CONTRACT BIDDING: B should bid three diamonds, which is a forcing bid and requires A to keep the bidding open. If by any chance A should bid spades, B should bid for a ' Mian diamonds ana a S nean. suic is d s,am with any Qther bid by A not strong enough to trump clubs an g should bid a small slam in diamonds, ipades. One .diamond, therefore, is^A 8 assists" the diamonds, B should proper bid. _ J bid a grgind slam in diamOiids. ^ CONTRACT BIDDING: 1 A should bid two dianionds, a forcing 'Hid over the dealer's club bid. Hi3 :i|iartner is thus forced to bid and, Unless he bids hearts, A's next bid ; jihould be fire diamonds. If the partner . fjids hearts or assists diamond1. A* Should bid a little slam in hearts, or r diamonds accordingly; //";• Hand N%|.; : Y '% • IA z *! Hand No. 4 ; /W • Y : : A B : :• ' % • r ne? u- A ; v : .'i .. C'lu'"3 -- none Dia ninds -- A, K, J, 10, 7,4, 3, 2 Spades -- A, 7, 6, 5 . score, rubber-game. What should "rJv as dealer, bid with the foregoing '...ad? ^JKifts-A, Q, J, 9, 7,4 Clubs -- A, Q, J, 10, 7, 6, 2 Diamonds none Spades--none r No score, rubber game. Wliat should ; s iit, nothing will be lost by Z's shut-out Z, as dealer, bid withf the foregoing v,;^ f5r the spades will score as side hand? ,» | tricks. AUCTION BIDDING: Z should bid five diamonds. This is a perfect example of the shut-out bid. i lie purpose of sucii a bid is to shut out ' opponents from showing the heart suit. " ll Z's pirtner should nold the spade: AUCTION BIDDING: Z should bid one heart and, if overbid, should show the club suit. This jhand is different from the preceding one in that the heart suit is longer and stronger and the club suit is not so istrong as the minor suit in hand No. 2. It is a hand, therefore, in which both Suits should be shown if possible and CONTRACT BIDDING: Z should bid two diamonds. This bid is a forcing bid and requires a bid by Y." If the latter bids two no trump, the minimum response, Z should bid five diamonds. If Y ^ids two spades, Z should bid a small slam in spades! If Y assists diamonds, Z should bid a small slam in diamonds. OF EMILY !annie vt ' Meistersinger Features Sixth Week , at Civic Opera; Tito Schipa Returns (® by McClure Newspaper Syndtcat*.) (WN'U Ser\'lc«.) . . * • F ONLY coming home had beeft tlie jvsarm relaxed experience It .should have been. There they all were, bless them, in the boxy old red brick hous® in ,>hlc'h every number of that family, ©f five children had first seen the fight of day. „ " It was b house plH8tered over, tlHie •krid tiiiie again, with the most poigr. ant niemories of Emf ly Stofteld Brandt's life. Her baby linger prints •Were still . oh one of the undtir layefs of wall paper in wliat had once been :Ui^ nu^serj-, and which now served as guest rffoni during family reunions ;#f Vvisltp- of the married ^hildr^n. had seen the light, of adoifficenCe in this house, the happy f eeps/ the first eager tweEtties; love; hiarriapre. . .' . : ... \ ". Coming back |6. It; after a fiye-jearperiod. as the wife of asyoung attache >to a Far East government, was the reward of a silent nostalgia she had privately endured through every one of the lonjr Intervening months. Not even her mother, with hair that had gone even whiter in the interval, and •Who now sat in her accustomed place at the head of the table, her hand In the familiar gesture of tilting, the teapot/ had sensed to what extent this girl had been lonely for hen : In many ways, all except the'fun-' Sda mental one, It was an ideal home- Coining. There were--all four of her brothers and sisters, with wives, husbands, children, around that board, and her father, even with his deafness and increasing debilities, still Sitting with his' handsome old authority at his place where the sideboard mirror reflected him three times. The only one missing of all the little compact group was Robert. His ' work as attache did -not permit a visit from the Far East. - This was Emily's trip, alone, after five years,, back to o the sweet warm Scenes of her childhood. This was Emily's trip--silently, secretly, her trip. Not even Robert yet ilmew the deep-rooted mission of her trip. She had come home to the bosom of her family to unburden that mis- "Sion... ' •,'••-•'• w,: C How good and staple and right and normal and decent they were. Ellison and his blond wife, Marie. Their marriage had taken, all right. Regarding them across the table, they seemed , to Emily, so" tired, like sleek purring young cats. Even the highhanded, always difficult to manage sister Hilda, had found her mate in Hugh. Their banter. If nervous and high, was quick, good natured; their •shafts of glances seeming to dart through Intervening figures straight for 6ne another. The same with Mercina and Roy. The broo<l which came home occasionally to roost at the pa-. ternal board was a thriving one. The brood had come home now to do honor to Emily, five years absept, and the only one of the children who had as yet set foot on foreign land. "Aunt Emily, do Chinamen reat dead rats?" How good to be among these, her own! The prattling children of her brothers and sisters; the warm Un- The first terra of endearment he had used since their honeymoon. A sparse word that years before would have meant much. But now, In the long period of his self-concentratiop, embittered by her loneliness, satiated With1 his sapping ambition, weary of his coldness, even though it were only a tempermental coldness, it meant nothing to Emily, Exultantly, ft meant nothing to Emily. No longer could iltobert hurt and chill and defeat her. , „ She was not going back -to htm. That was her homecoming. Emily fiqd- come- home to stay! <" It Was not going to be difficult to tell mother. Alone, upstairs, with the others down at bridge, they huddled, as of old, on the wide old bed id her parents' room. "Oh, my sweet," sighed the mother of^ Emily, and drew her close and kissed her a dozen times and let .the tears flow from her cheeks onto those of her daughter, "sometimes, In these five year*, it has. seemed to me I must fly to you. My most understanding child. The only one to' whom I con talk, Unburden myself. Cry." • "Oh, mother--my dea.r-r-." . - » "Emily dearest, tell hie the, gdod things. T am so hungry for the g6od "filings. T^ll me' <>f a'|itl Robert. TXe only marriage of all^ my five which has brought, happiness" So much to tell j'ipiu, 'darling., Wliat we've been through ! Wi t h Roy. and Letta; trying to hold, them together, deaft It's been a wrong marriage from the start, byt scandal would kill your father. Then there^B Ellison and Marie, I didn't want to write it to you darling, but did you know? For alnibst a year they'threatened divorce, until, almost on my knees, Emily, I succeeded, for your father's sake, fpr the family^s sake, In patching things up. Oh, my Emily, I've needed you so! Tell me some things--some good things about you and Robert." Before she sailed back to Japan, spme three months later, the mother of Emily had been fed with a banquet of good things about, her and Robert. Hjrem^^amaon.C niinoU Association. TITO SCHIPA Who R*Joins Company Sooa MARIA RAJDL Aa Eva in Melaterstn|tr Popular Tenor Will Remain for Season; First Performance of Wagner Comedy Billed. w&- Vfjy"," fei'. *! The Chicago Civic Opera will say farewell to a popular tenor and a brilliant coloratura during the sixth week of opera. Jan Kiepura, who joined the company this season, and Noel Eadie, another newcomer, will have their last performances, th^ former in Rlgoletto on Monday evening (In which Miss Eadie also appears) and the latter In the Magic Flute on Saturday. Tito Schipa, one of the most popular Irtists on the Civic Opera roster, will arrive in Chicago during the week to remain for the season, and...will begin preparations for his first appearance immediately. Mr Schipa, who has Just completed a triumphal concert tour of Europe, was decorated with .the cross of the Legion of Honor In •Paris recently. _ Richard Wagner's Die Meistersinger, - Which won so much favorable com- •fent last season, is to be produced for the first time this year on Thurs- 4ay, December 10. The opera, consid- : -«red the finest composition of its type Jtt the operatic repertoire, is given a performance at the Civic Opera which li not equalled anywhere else in the world. The principals for the first performance are Maria Rajdl as Eva, Jtfarla Olszewska as Magdelena, Rene liaison as Walther, Rudolf Bockel- «ann as Hans Sachs, Alexander Kipuls Pogner and a long list of splendid Wtists in other important roles. Egon Poltak. who prepared the work for the . {Chicago stage last season, conducts. ^The augmented chorus is supplied by Hie Chicago Civic Opera Chorus ;^;^|chool. ; : jp; Mail orders tor Blchard Wagner's - farslfal are being received In.large pumberk The opera Is to have its r^tffft-f^lrat performance here In ten years, J *nd the popular price scale of Saturday evening prevails. Sunday matinee, l>eceniber 20, Is the date. The cast Jtoclttdes t rida Loidcr, Maiwm, NImm, KIpnis, Habich and Elaromeo, with Egon Pollak conducting. The opera is staged by Dr. Otto Erhardt. Complete schedule for the sixth week is: Monday, Dec. T, at 8--RIGOLETTO (in Italian). Opera in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi. With Noel Eadie, Sonia Sharnova, Jan Kiepura, John Charles Thomas, VlrgMo Lazzari and others. Conductor, Roberto MoraWonl. Tuesday, MONA LISA (In German). Opera Hi {(wo acts by Max Von Schlll ings. With Frlda I>eider, Maria Rajdl, Paolo Marlon, Oscar Colcaire, Rudolf Bockelmann, Chase Baromeo and others. Conductor, Egon Pollak. Wednesday, L'ORACOLO (In Italian). Opera in one set by Franco Leonl. With Seraflna Di Leo, Antonio Cortis, Vannl-Marcoux, Virgllio Lazzari and others. Conductor, Roberto Moranzoni. Ballet and chorus from Prince Igor. Conductor, Emil Cooper. GIANNI SCHICCHI (In Italian). Opera in one act by Giacomo Puccini. With Mary McCormlc, Charles Hackett, Vannl-Marcoux and others. Conductor, Roberto Moranzoni. Thursday, at 7:45--DIE MEISTERSINGER (in German). Opera in three acts by Richard Wagner. With Maria Rajdl, Maria Olszewska, Rene Malson, Rudolf Bockelmann, Eduard Habich, Alexander KIpnIs, Robert RInglIng and others. Conductor, Egon Pollak. Saturday, at 2-rIIERODIADE (In French). Opera In five acts by Jules Massenet. With Mary MtfCormic, Maria Olszewska, Rene Maison, John Charles Thomas and Chase Baromeo. Ballet. Conductor, Emll Cooper. 8aturday, at 8 -- THE MAGIC FLUTE (in German). Opera!In two; acts by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. With Noel Eadie, Maria Rajdl, Frlda Leider, Maria Olszewska, Paolo Marlon, Rudolf Bockelmann, Alexander Kipnls aud others. Conductor Egou •'! erstanding glances of those with whom she had grown up. Daughter, tell' us about Robert's work." "Ah, father, Robert will go far. These years are Just his apprenticeship. He takes to diplomacy like ^a fish to water." "Well, the family needs som6 one to shed a little glory of distinction on it, what say, father?" This from Roy, at thirty-five a lumber millionaire, and already known for philanthropies. Curious of his wife, Letta, sitting beside him, with her hand touching his, to utter that, "What, yes?" But oh, how good to be home among them. How it eased her heart and at the same time, wrung it with the tightness of pain. To have to enter a wedge here! To have to Inject Into this well Diplomatic Trick That / Served Useful Purpose Bismarck precipitated a great war by altering a telegram. Daniel Webster and Alexander Baring, Lord Ashburton, prevented one by a' very similar device, but they fiev-~ er bragged about it, Isaac S. Metcalf writes, in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. They were trying to fix the boundary between the'United States and Canada from the Atlantic and the Rockies. They made much progress in the first months of 1842, for they were alike eager for peace and they recognized that the old treaty of 1783 would no longer work. It was, however, one thing for Webster and Ashburton to draft a treaty and very much another to get it ratified. The Canadian rebellion of 1837 and the Feniafi adventure of the Caroline had stirred up the jingoes on both sides. The British parliament was properly indignant and the United States senate ran true to form. In July, 1842, however, Webster produced before the senate an early French map which showed a red line sustaining the British claim. This line, he said, represented Benjamin Franklin's understanding of what the boundary should be. The senators from Maine and the house delegation, too,, took one look and came to heel. Almost on the jiiinie day the British foreign office^ submitted to parliament a map wrh»ch was supposed to have belonged to Kjiig George III, and which showed a red line which followed closely the American claim. The legend ran to the effect that this line indicated the boundary, "as described by Mr. Oswald," who had been the -British peace conuiiission- I. J. Brow^ of Chicago has announced his candidacy for the nomination to the office of state auditor on the, republican ticket at the primary election to be held next April. s Paul E. Arnold, Chicago, has announced his candidacy for nomination to the offiee of secretary of state on the republican ticket, subject to the will of the voters at jthe primaries next April. ' Honorable Edward N. Hurley, chairman, Chicago Citizens' committee, has launched plans for the bringing of the republican and democratic national conventions to Chicago in 1932. According to Mr. Hurley, sentiment among leaders of both political parties seems in favor of holding the two .natiortal nominating conventions in that city. Stuart E. Fierson, director of the state department of agriculture, has reported that the state's race track reyenue thii year was only $558,122.60 the smallest amount that h^s been collected since 1927. The riuSeiing; at the licensed i'ace tracks this Season totaled only 164 racing days. James, A. Watson, "superintendent Qf budget, has announced that a total of $6,031,511 in appropriations for the governors departments and commissions made by the fifty-sixth general assembly for 1929-31 has lapsed'back into the treasury. , Attorney General Oscar £. Carlstrom has informed State Treasurer Edward J. Barrett that a name written by mistake across the face of a state soldier's bonus bond does not spoil it but hinders it? negotiability. Baseball is far more popular than football at Illinois p$jsons,- according Twice Told r I- • ***$« t V Items of Interest Takwi Froat the Files of the Plaindetffer of Tears Skating on the mill pond is furnishing iriore than a little pleasure for the young folks. Some of the older ones are also enjoying the sport. The McHenry Pleasure club is again tlie scene of activity. Quite a number of new members have been taken in during the past few weeks. The boiler at the electric light p^ant has been repaired and put into firstclass condition. The service promises to be better than ever henceforth. FIFTY YEARS AGO Mr*. Schumacher, who has just Opened a store jn Schnoors block, near the depot, has-a fine stock of fancy goods and confectionery. The news room, just operted by James Gallagher in the store of E. Mwlus, is now ready to supply the reading public with daily Or weekly papers and magazines. The road commissioners of the town of McHenry will meet at Johnsburg tomorrow, Thursday, to make- Some arrangements in regard to building the Johnsbvirg bridge.- : *•• O. W. Owen is fixing room in tjte rear of Jiis store for a studib, where the pictures painted by Miss. C.: B. Owen while in Franfeef. exhibition' in a few days, .r• FORTY. YEARS AGO*'" We learn that Chicago parties have purchased seven acres of land on the east side of the river, for the purpose of starting a Florists establishment. Sunday was a genuine winter day, fully eight inches of snow falling but the roads being so rough it is not the be?t of sleighing. The thermometer fell to within three degrees of zero. Tickets have been issued for the annual New Year's Party at the River- TWENTY YtfiiRS AGO : H ^ vAt nine o'clock on ThanksgiWlf morning there occurred a wedding of more than ordinary interest to the people of Johnsburg when Miss l}Iartha B. Mertes and Mr. F&ter M. Shaefer were united. The ceremony was performed by Rev. S. Wolfgarten of St. John's catholic church, Johnsburg. While attempting to dig a rabbit from beneath a wood pile last Thursday morning, John Amon of Hampshire was shot through the heart and instantly killed when his shot gun lying on the wood pile wa.s accidenttally discharged. ' " Kirs. E. S. Wheeler left here last week Tuesday for Silvie* tiakfe, Wis., where she was guest of hiBr daughter, Mrs. J&nws N. Sayler,' ..;'•"."•:••• s ' Laures and Jones, the new grocery firm on the West Side, opened their store to the public , on Monday morning of this week, *-T . •John A. Worts has disposed of his saloon business on the West Side td Kirk Crane of Solon. The'latter has already taken posession. We are told that Mr. Worts will wfivQ. Vijg f^inily. "to Chicago, &oon. --r • to Col. Frank D. Whipp,'state super-1 ®ide House' which takes place on Friintendent of prisons. The Illinois League of Women Voters has agreed to , support vice repressive laws that would make men and women offenders equally responsible before the law. The November safety poster^has day evening, Misses Maggie Cnnway, Delia and Ella Welch. Will and Jimmie Conway and Robert Burke attended the Foresters dance at Woodstock last week. The Elgin Courier says a monster been mailed to thirty thousand cen- rPetltlon s^ned by hundreds of farmtral Illinois school children by the' Wl11 be Presented t0 Congressman Springfield Automobile club. Teach-1 "oplons to be laid before Congress at ers are urged to-warn" their pupils to . s i ession asking for the extenrefrain from dashing thoughtlessly in 1 -lon of the £ree dehvery service t6 front of traffic' to retrive some object of play. The state legislature may resort to night session in order to facilitate public hearings on revenue bills offered by Governor Louis L. Emmerson's tax commission. in the house chamber of the legisla-! j1.8 J of?c\ th? thir,d n?achine of its ture. The idea was suggested by!kind to be brought into McHenry Representative Richard J. Lyons and j countysets a precedent in Illinois legislative ! halls. j Warden Henry C. Hill, of the Joliet state prison states that the convicts j in the prison now have 124,415 pounds of dehydrated vegetables and soup | stock stored away for winter use. Corn, carrots, parsley, egg plant, I spinach, peas, arid other vegetables \ are included. State institution officials are convinced that dehydration is the ers of 59 years before. Lord Palmerston, always a flreeater< ranted against what he called the "Ashburton capitulations," but parliament made haste to approve the treaty. The United States senate was also surprisingly tame and voted hastily to ratify. "The battle of the maps," as Webster called it, was won and the present boundary, midway between the red lines of the two maps, was fixed for keeps. The Canadians, (especially In New Brunswick, felt that parliament had let them down. -A good many people In Maine regarded the senate's action In the same light. Then, too, there tare still those who suspect that both the maps wpS't prepared for the occasion. woven group the first strange alien, note of disharmony. And yet the time had come; irrevocably the time had come. Five years of warding It off had been only evasion. Thank God her mother would understand. No matter how difficult the telling; no matter how bitter for her to have to hear, the woman there in the lace cap, tilting the teapot with a gesture dear to Emily, would understand. Later, the rest of them must know. Father, whose high pride would suffer, Mercina, who would seem unsympathetic, but stand fiercely by; Roy, who might not comprehend, but would rally with a sense of clan . . . oh, It was going to be hard to tell these people, whose lives were on even keel. And strangely it wonld be hardest of all to tell Robert. It seemed Impossible, and yet was possible, that In all. the years he had not seemed to suspect. At the Ship, bidding her farewell, tears had actually popped Into his self-centered eyes. "Come back soon and well, dear," he had whispered to her In a brief moment away from the crowd. tatoa Kill Wild Ufa farmers. Thirteen thousand pounds of bptter were sold on the Elgin board of trade Monday at 29 cents per pound. , TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO T*16 Marengo Republican-News has Loud speakers have been installed' a type-setting machine into •- TEN YEARS AGO A team hitched to a milk wagon, owned by John S. Freund, who resides east of the village, took fright at a passing automobile at the intersection of Green and Elm streets on Monday morning and smashed into the signal post at that point. > While hurrying to the bedside of his wife at the Woodstock hospital on Wednesday evening, M- J. Rabbett of that city was struck and knocked down by a large touring car while he was crossing the street. The driver of the car never stopped and therefore his identity is unknown. Husk O. Hara's best orchestra will furnish the music at the dance to be given by the Just Us club and. McHenry post of the American Legion on New Year's eve. V Viaw of 60,000 Miles Square From the summit of Pikes Pfeak One has a view of 60,000 square miles of scenery. Because of its isolated position at the-extremity of a grand spur of the Rockies, it guards both moantains and plains. With a telescope, Denver, eighty miles away, may bo seen. most satisfactory method of preserving foodstuffs of this nature. A successful method of washing coal smoke with plain water carrying a little iron and manganese has been discovered at the University of Illinois. 1 Scarlet fever and whooping cough are responsible for one-half Of all the epidemic sickness in Illinois at the present time. ; John M. Gibbs, chairman of the states, cities, and towns eommittee tif the George Washington bi-centennial commission urges mayors and other officials of every city and town to appoint George Washington bi-centennial committees now in order to get ready for the bi-centennial year. All organizations and institutions are urged to plan for a "George Washington Year" in 1932. In the special session of the legislature, Representative John M. Peffers has introduced a series of 92 bill£ to cut all tax rates 20 per cent. The income and tobacco taxes are facing fierce opposition. ""\V ; - TIMELY TIPS For Carefree Winter Driving Follow these simple suggestions to insure maximum freedom from "trouble" when the first real cold snap strikes. - _ Check ignition system* Check arid charge battery. Clean and adjust carburetor. Clean gas tank and filter. Inspect radiator hoae. V s Inspect fan belk - • . Adjust generator charging rate. Replace oil filter cartridge Have gears (transmission and differential) flushed clean--and re-filled with Mobiloil "CW"-- the Quality Winter Gear Oil. Have crankoase drained aild refilled with Mobiloil Arctic--the "double range" winter oil, when the first advance warning of cold weather ar- ' rives. Mobiloil Arctic--the double range Winter Oil flows freely at zero temperatures. Lubricates perfectly at high engine temperatures. Central Gar&e, Johnsburg <v'£ ^ FRED J. SMITH, Prop. Most With paved roads and fast automobiles on the Increase, the number of birds and animals killed on highways .mounts steadily every year, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Very few small birds can fly faster than 25 miles an, hour, and small land animals move much more slowly, specialists of the biological survey point out, so they have no chance whatever with a fast motor car. In the prairie regions of the country ground squirrels and Jack rabbits suffer most, while In the autumn in the eastern states the box tortoise is perhaps the chief victim.' Tk« Two Assistants Upton Sinclair, the radical writer, said at a dinner in Monterey: "We have a lot of millionaires in America, but they all worked hard, too hard, to accumulate their millions. .They broke the laws of health, and some of them broke a lot of other laws. "In fact, gentlemen, we might almost say a millionaire can't get along nowadays without two assistants--a doctor to keep him out of bed and a lawyer to keep him-out of Jail." i"Wi' ifl^, •• Soma Comfort On* advantage to buying her a large diamond engagement ring is that you can borrow Just so much more on It when you're married and really need money.--Ohio State Journal. ' T*S Advaaood for BsMfrf • •vchlmedes (287-212 B. C.) was to far advanced of his age that his principles did not become established until the Fifteenth century. ; • . Hop* and Eiptritnes "Hops," said HI Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "is the Irresponsible advance agent of many a poor perforin anc* given by Experience."--Washing ton Star. ' ill Imdwstry May Industry is a virtue, but it Is only one of the virtue*; unlllumlnated In dostry makes a dull dog.--American lUgeslQ*. v-lt > Why buy a second-choice tir^ when first ehoice costs no more. When you buy Goodyears--whether the famous All- Weather Tread or the popular sturdy Pathfinder or the new husky Speedway--you're buying the first Choice tires of the world. • . u ' For sixteen years it has been a fact that "More people ride on Goodyear Tires than any other kind." v Why buy a second choice tire wn^n you can get first choice tires at these low prices)./ 5 Gallons of Light, Medium, Heavy or Winter Oil, for... WALTER J. FREUND Glycerine, Alcohol, Chains, Batteries and Vulcanising of all kinds Phbne 294 Work Guaranteed Wert McHenry GOODYEAR PATHFINDER vs.'* . f ' • ' Each ia Sise ••-. Back Pairs 29x4.4*4* -- J 4M % 4.80 29x4.50-2© 5.60 5.45 80x4.50-21 ° 5.69 5.55 28x4.75-19 .................. 6.65 6.45 29x4.7$-2© 6.75 Ml 29x5.00-19 ... 6.98 6JB0 80x5.00-20 7.10 6.90 >28x5.25-18 - *.90 7.65 29x5.23-19 -- .L.. 8.15 7.90 30x5.25-20 ....... 8.30 8.05 81x5.25-21 8.57 8.35 28x5.50-18 8.75 8J»0 29x5.50-19 •MMM.MM.H... 8.90 8.65 82x6.00-20 11.47 11.15 83x6.00-21 .................. 11.65 11.30 Prices Subject to Change Without T~" Nottee GOODYEAR SPEEDWAY » • . >, • - <*•--iSadrla' Sise ' Jmdk - Pairs 29x4.40-21 * 4.35 % 4-25 29x4.50-20 4.78 4.63 .*,0x4.50-21 4.85 4.70 28x4.75-19 5.68 5.57 29x5.00-1® ...... 5.99 5.83 30x3.00-20 -- 6.10 5J5 31x5.2S-21 ..... 7.37 7.26 30x3 V, ..... ...-- S.7S 3w65 Mbm Subject to Chant* Witkevt Notice

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